Detroit Free Press

Handcyclis­ts Tingley and Sumner zoom to consecutiv­e victories

- Bill Laitner Contact: blaitner@freepress.com

Last year, Matt Tingley had to duel for the lead over many of the 26.2 marathon miles before winning the Disabiliti­es Division on his handcycle.

Tingley ultimately topped the field of 16 male handcyclis­ts, after a drama-filled race that entailed flat tires and mechanical mishaps many. This year, he not only topped the field again — Tingley, 34, of Rochester Hills beat his previous time by nearly 21⁄2 minutes.

And retired U.S. Army Lt. Col. Leigh Sumner also repeated as a winner, although Sumner had a rash of troubles.

Tingley said he had no mechanical snafus and that repaved roads were smooth on Sunday’s largely new course, leading to his $600 prize in a time of 1 hour, 16 minutes and 15 seconds. Tingley had been an eager bike racer before suffering leg injuries in a motorcycle crash in 2017. Next week, he’s headed to Montreal to enter a contest in rock climbing, another big test of his upper-body strength “because I sure can’t use my legs,” he said with a chuckle.

Finishing second among the handcyclis­ts was John Masson, 51, of Southern Pines, North

Carolina, notching his third Free Press Marathon but first one in which he placed. Masson outraced five entrants whose past times had them seeded ahead of him.

Masson was one of the event’s many athletes wearing the colors of the Achilles Freedom Team, which trains injured military members and veterans. A veteran of the U.S. Army’s Special Forces, he was injured in Afghanista­n in 2010, “You’re gonna love this — 12 years ago today,” he said. He praised his bicycle guides, two of the nearly 50 two-wheeled escorts, most from the Royal Oak-based Wolverine Sports Club.

“The course was very technical — many turns — but the guides were just amazing. They give you fair warning,” leading him to set a personal record, he said. His time was an easy-torecall 1:23:45.

Third-place finisher Andrew Hairston, 29, hails from Camp Lejune, North Carolina, although he said he was racing for his birthplace — the Virgin Islands. Like all the racers, he praised his bicycle guides, and they gave it back.

Despite repeating as the women’s winner, Sumner was disappoint­ed, which she conveyed with a Southern twang.

“We’d a gotten the course record but it’s a new bike and everything was falling off,” she said, with a laugh, adding: “I can put that chain back on when I’m still moving.”

Sumner, 63, of Newton Grove, North Carolina won $600 after finishing in 2:02:03. Men and women who place second and third among the handcyclis­ts won $300 and $150, respective­ly.

Laura Stark, 32, of Canton, was the secondplac­e woman handcyclis­t in 2:40:27; and Margaret Sprouse, 62, of Bowling Green, Kentucky was third in 2:47:24.

In addition to the event’s 26 handcyclis­ts who finished Sunday’s race, there was one throwback to the days of wheelchair racing. Corey Petersen, 41, of Glendale, Arizona, raced on what old-timers call a “push-rim” wheelchair. She finished in 3:23:36.

 ?? RYAN GARZA/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Matthew Tingley, of Rochester Hills, crosses the finish line in first place for the Disability Division during the 45th annual Detroit Free Press Marathon in Detroit on Sunday.
RYAN GARZA/DETROIT FREE PRESS Matthew Tingley, of Rochester Hills, crosses the finish line in first place for the Disability Division during the 45th annual Detroit Free Press Marathon in Detroit on Sunday.

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